Vaccination in India was always going to be a mammoth challenge, given its population of nearly 1.4 billion citizens.
Prime Minister Modi's accelerated vaccination drive, currently under way, is hitting several snags along the way. After rolling out a heroic plan for all aged between 18 and 44 years, only 5 crore people, representing just 8% of that population group, have been vaccinated so far. Among these, only a miniscule percentage have been fully vaccinated. The problem becomes even more complex once the digital divide and differential prices of vaccines across hospitals comes into the picture.
Meanwhile, the Centre dismissed reports of the Co-WIN portal being hacked and data of those vaccinated being leaked online. Reports of an alleged hack of the vaccination site surfaced on Thursday, with pictures of a website on the dark web that claimed to be hawking the names, mobile numbers, Aadhaar IDs and location data of 15 crore vaccinated citizens.
In a stunning claim, a group of public health experts said mass, indiscriminate and incomplete vaccination can trigger emergence of mutant strains and recommended that there is no need to inoculate those who had documented coronavirus infection. The report, submitted to PM Modi, says while it makes perfect sense to vaccinate all adults, amid limited resources, the focus should be to reduce deaths. Vaccinating those in the 18-44 age group, given the present constraints, will not be cost-effective.